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AR01055_EMAP_Gazetteer_of_Sites_4-2_10.pdf - The Heritage ...

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Dublin<br />

<strong>The</strong> following is based on general and thematic papers on Scandinavian Dublin (Murray 1983;<br />

Simpson 2000; Wallace 1992a, 1992b, 2001, 2004) and a range <strong>of</strong> excavation publications related to<br />

the town. It will focus on various aspects <strong>of</strong> the town’s layout including its location, defences, streets<br />

and pathways, plots and fences, structures and evidence for craft and industry. <strong>The</strong> summary will<br />

begin with an assessment <strong>of</strong> Dublin’s earliest Scandinavian phase in the ninth century – the<br />

settlement and potential longphort site – and will be followed with a chronological appraisal <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Hiberno-Scandinavian town’s tenth, eleventh and twelfth century archaeological levels (Fig. 121).<br />

Fig. 121: Plan <strong>of</strong> Hiberno-Scandinavian Dublin (after Walsh 2001, 90).<br />

Ninth Century (Fig. 122)<br />

Archaeological evidence for the first Scandinavian settlement in Dublin has, until recently, been<br />

absent leading to disagreement amongst scholars about its whereabouts. <strong>The</strong> sites <strong>of</strong> Dublin Castle,<br />

Kilmainham/Islandbridge, the ecclesiastical enclosure (either the area bounded by Stephen Street,<br />

Whitefriar Street and Peter’s Row or the church <strong>of</strong> St Michael le Pole) and Usher’s Island have all<br />

been suggested for the location <strong>of</strong> the longphort (see overview in Simpson 2000, 21–1). However,<br />

excavations at Exchange Street Upper/Parliament Street (Gowen with Scully 1996; Scally 2002) and<br />

Temple Bar West (Simpson 1999) have revealed banks, a road, pathways, structures and plots dating<br />

between the mid ninth and tenth centuries based on radiocarbon dates and artefact comparisons.<br />

<strong>The</strong> sites were located in the north-eastern section <strong>of</strong> the later tenth-century town with the River<br />

Liffey to the north and the River Poddle to the east. An early bank at Ross Road potentially marks the<br />

southern boundary (see below) while Halpin (2005, 102–4) proposes that the western edge <strong>of</strong> the<br />

settlement occurred at Fishamble Street/Werburgh Street prior to the expansion <strong>of</strong> the town in the<br />

tenth century.<br />

247

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